rosered32: (rose on wood)
My cool guy friend at work made me 10 Cds out of his music collection. There is some really great stuff on them. Well so what should i think? Some one said he obviously has a crush on me. I don't think so. He knows that i have a mate. Yes my mate and I have our days/months but he knows that. Whatever.

As to my mate, he is well. I hope he knows I care about him and that he means a great deal to me. Go Killer! Save the cafe from it's friendly critters!

Work is crazy. I have a Holiday Program Thursday Night and I am really not doing anything for it other than being there. I am not really in charge of anything and my co teacher is running the show as usual. I am not sure how I feel about this. I mean it is less work for me, but I feel useless sometimes. I don't know....

So I am listening to a friend play Duran Duran! I love it! It's A View to a Kill with the video of them in the Eiffel Tower. and "Bon,...Simon Le Bon" It is great! He is looking for Save a Prayer by them as well. I miss their old music.....
Can Some one tell me the answer to this trivia Question: Where did Duran Duran Get their name? Hee Hee...

Well Off and running like a herd of turtles. Good night and Happy Yule!!!!!!!

Bleh

Date: 2001-12-19 12:19 am (UTC)From: [identity profile] sagebearz.livejournal.com
Barbarella (1968)

Science Fiction/Fantasy
In this infamous film version of the popular French comic strip by Jean-Claude Forest, Jane Fonda plays the sexy yet innocent space-age heroine of the year 40,000 A.D. who never gets herself into a situation that requires too much clothing. BARBARELLA opens with the titular heroine stripping down to nothing in zero gravity among strategically placed credits. From there Barbarella embarks on a mission to find a peace-threatening young scientist named Duran Duran (Milo O'Shea) by order of the president of Earth. En route, she's attacked by killer dolls, is strapped into a contraption known as the Excessive Machine, and falls in love with a blind angel. Remaining true to its comic book origins, Barbarella’s adventure unfolds in a series of dramatic difficulties and unlikely solutions, making for a galloping pace and never-ending opportunities for Mario Garbuglia's hallucinatory set design to dazzle. With guest appearances by 1960s icons Anita Pallenberg, Marcel Marceau, and David Hemmings and featuring dialogue by novelist Terry Southern, among others, BARBARELLA is not only a comic sci-fi sex romp but also a sly tongue-in-cheek portrait of the morality and debauchery of that era. And interestingly enough, Fonda was married to director Roger Vadim at the time of production.
MPAA Rating: PG.

Re: Bleh

Date: 2001-12-19 12:33 am (UTC)From: [identity profile] rosered32.livejournal.com
You know you just looked that up and i knew you would know!!!!

*phewww*

*hugs*

Date: 2001-12-19 08:42 am (UTC)From: [identity profile] idrinkwine.livejournal.com
It's from an old Jane Fonda film called "Barbarella". I'm pretty sure Duran Duran was the name of a villian. Sorry I can't recall any better, Jane was rather distracting and I'd been drinking a lot of wine when I saw it.

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